Typically ransomware will be hidden in emails that look like invoices for goods, communication from the tax office (HMRC) or your bank, requests to authenticate your accounts (confirm your user name and password) following an update etc.

If you use a machine that is not on the managed desktop please ensure that you

Update all Anti-Virus

Have a backup in place and that it is operational

Use minimal user permissions where possible

Can we remind all users to log out from their machines at the end of the working day. Information Services apply updates and patches to managed machines overnight and some patches do not apply until a machine is restarted.

If you have not logged out and restarted your machine for a few days please do so.

Information Services have received reports of a recent Phishing / Spam email message which some staff have received that contains an infected attachment. Message titles include “Incoming Fax Report” and “Fax #7292105”. If you receive any email messages which contain attachments, are suspicious in nature and are unexpected, then please delete them.

If you have opened a suspicious message similar to the one above please contact the IT Helpdesk on x4045 or via email at ithelp@hw.ac.uk immediately.

Basic email etiquette can help make your email communications go smoother, and also help you establish some best practice to take with you into your professional lives.

As a general rule it is best to have at least 2 email accounts – your business (university or work) email and your personal one (for friends and family) – and not to mix the two.

This is one of my longer posts…but stick with it…hope you find it useful.

Please note that email communications from Heriot-Watt University (e.g. from Registry, Information Services, Finance, your School etc) will be sent to your @hw.ac.uk address – and we prefer you to use your @hw.ac.uk email address when contacting us.

There are two types of email

Informal email is meant for emails to your friends, colleagues and (since we’re pretty informal at University) University staff.

Formal email is for when you write emails about job applications, interviews, internships, funding etc.

It might also pay to err towards formality when emailing anybody within the university that you don’t know very well (maybe someone outside your home School). Very few people are offended by somebody being too polite.

Informal emails

1. Start by addressing the person you’re writing to
“Dear Moira” is fine – most members of staff don’t mind being called by their first name (but you might like to double check with your lecturer/professor). It may be more formal for some countries/campuses/cultures – so go with whatever is acceptable practice for your environment.

If you don’t know the person you are emailing, or are contacting them for the first time, you might prefer to use their title – e.g. “Dear Dr Smith”

If you want to be more informal then “Hi Moira” or “Hello Moira” would be fine.

Addressing the person at the start of the email is especially important if you’re writing an email which is copied to several people – if you don’t then it’s possible that everybody will think the email is intended for somebody else (and therefore do nothing). If you are writing to a generic mailing list you could start with “Dear mailing list” or “Dear All“.

2. The email should be short and to the point – and have a relevant Subject line
Rambling on and off the topic is never good and tends to obscure the actual meaning of the email. Subject lines like “Help!” or “I’m stuck” – or a blank subject line – aren’t particularly helpful to the recipient.

3. Manners aren’t optional
A “please” and “thank you” are always appreciated. And requests formed as a question rather than a command e.g. “Can I have an extension” rather than “I want an extension” or “Give me an extension” – are usually better received.

4. Use correct grammatical English
Remember that you are at University! Also avoid text-speak and obscure acronyms e.g. AAK (this one is maybe not that obscure…)

5. Provide enough detail
If you’re asking for an extension then say which course you need the extension for. If you are having an IT problem give as much information about the problem as you can. It will save the recipient having to write back to ask for more info.

6. Use normal capitalisation
Names, dates, places, most acronyms and the start of a new sentence should be capitalised. Entire sentences shouldn’t.

7. Size matters
Don’t send large attachments – compress files if necessary. Even if your email system can cope with the file you are sending your recipients might not be able to. Watch your file names too – you don’t want things like report.doc.doc – some systems might block it.

8. Sign off with your name
It’s also usual to have a “closing salutation” such as “Best regards“, Best wishes etc. (Cheers is OK between friends but probably too informal for general use).
See Formal emails, point 5 for more options.

9. Be patient
Staff won’t be sitting around just waiting for your email – they’ve lots of other things they need to be doing – so try to allow at least 2 or 3 days before you chase anything up.

10. Don’t send an angry email
If you are angry or upset about something – don’t put it in an email until you have calmed down a bit. It might be better to phone the person or talk to them face to face if you can. Angry emails can often make a bad situation worse.

OK – that was the 10 tips (so these are the ones I was counting…) – but there are a few more below you might find useful…

Formal emails

Most of the above applies – only in a stricter manner.

1. Address the email
If you know the name of the person you are writing to use both their title and name e.g. “Dear Dr Smith“. Most academic staff will be “Dr” or “Professor” but this is not always the case. Most academics prefer “Professor” to “Prof“. If you don’t know the name of the person then use “Dear Sir or Madam“.

2. Use correct, grammatical English
I realise I’m repeating myself but this is especially important if you’re applying for a job. Why should anybody employ somebody who has low standards in their professional work? It’s also worth using a spell checker for important emails.

3. Choice of email address
Give consideration to which email address you use. Formal emails are usually best from a professional sounding email address – so if you don’t want to use your @hw.ac.uk address, and your personal email is something like friskylady69@hotmail.com, you might like to create another personal email account with a more appropriate name for job applications etc.

4. Closing salutations
If you are writing a formal paper letter you should use
• Yours sincerely if you address the letter to a particular named individual e.g. “Dear Dr Jones”
• Yours faithfully if you address the letter to a generic “Dear Sir or Madam”

This rule can be applied to formal email as well.

Use your full (not your contracted) first name when signing off – even if all your friends call you Mikey – sign off with “Michael” and your surname.

Video

Emails are not a confidential medium – once you’ve clicked Send you are no longer in control of the information you have sent (also the case when posting to social media sites – it can go global before you know it!). Always do a final check – is it going to the right person, does it say the right thing, have you attached the correct file?